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In No Shame in My Game, anthropologist Katherine Newman presents a view of inner-city poverty radically different from that commonly accepted. The all-too-prevalent picture we get of the poor today - in the media, in the political sphere, and in scholarly studies - is of alienated minorities living in big-city ghettos, lacking in values and family structure, criminally inclined, and permanently dependent on government handouts.
What Newman reveals, however - as she focuses on the working poor in Harlem, one of the country's most depressed urban areas - is a community of people who are committed to earning a living, struggling to support themselves and their families on minimum-wage dead-end jobs, and clinging to the dignity of a regular paycheck, no matter how meager.
For two years, Professor Newman and her assistants followed people in Harlem - from work to school to the streets to their homes - and spent hundreds of hours talking to employees, and their bosses and supervisors, their friends and families. From observations and interviews, we come to understand not only the essential contribution that low-wage earners make to the survival of poor households, but also the ways in which these jobs affect young people's attitudes, prospects, and self-image.
Most powerfully, we listen as low-wage earners speak about their jobs, their ambitions, and their values - especially their devotion to family and belief in the work ethic.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Urban poor, Inner cities, Employment, Working poor, Empleo, Stadskernen, Innenstadt, Armut, Pobreza urbana, Barrios marginados, Werkgelegenheid, Arbeiter, Armoede, Poor, New York Times reviewedPlaces
United StatesEdition | Availability |
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1
No Shame in My Game: The Working Poor in the Inner City
April 25, 2000, Vintage
in English
0375703799 9780375703799
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2
No shame in my game: the working poor in the inner city
1999, Knopf and the Russell Sage Foundation
in English
- 1st ed.
0375402543 9780375402548
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Book Details
First Sentence
"From the outside, Jamal's building looks like an ordinary house that has seen better days."
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First Sentence
"From the outside, Jamal's building looks like an ordinary house that has seen better days."
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- Created April 29, 2008
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